Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the International Legal Discourse of 19Th Century Italy

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the International Legal Discourse of 19Th Century Italy Zurich Open Repository and Archive University of Zurich Main Library Strickhofstrasse 39 CH-8057 Zurich www.zora.uzh.ch Year: 2020 «Toil of the noble world»: Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the international legal discourse of 19th century Italy Fiocchi Malaspina, Elisabetta Posted at the Zurich Open Repository and Archive, University of Zurich ZORA URL: https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-195649 Journal Article Published Version Originally published at: Fiocchi Malaspina, Elisabetta (2020). «Toil of the noble world»: Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the international legal discourse of 19th century Italy. Clio @ Themis, 18:1-17. 1 Elisabetta FIOCCHI MALASPINA « Toil of the noble world » : Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the international legal discourse of 19th century Italy Abstract : The aim of this article is to reconstruct, from a legal historical point of view, the complexity and the meaning of international law in the Italian peninsula during the 19th century. The paper will analyse different entanglements that constituted the core of nineteenth-century Italian international legal discourse. It is structured in four sections, dealing respectively with : 1) the principle of nationality elaborated by Pasquale Stanislao Mancini and its repercussion both on private and public international law ; 2) the return to the historical origins of Italian international law and the role played by comparative constitutional law ; 3) the implementation and translation of particular legal genres, such as the attempts to codify international law ; 4) colonial education, including legal education, through the creation of the Scuola diplomatico- coloniale (colonial and diplomatic school). Keywords : International law, constitutional law, colonial law, Italy, 19th century Résumé : L’objectif de cet article est de reconstruire, d’un point de vue historico- juridique, la complexité et la signification du droit international dans la péninsule italienne au cours du XIXe siècle. L’article analysera les différents enchevêtrements qui constituaient le cœur du discours juridique international italien du XIXe siècle et il est structuré en quatre sections, traitant respectivement de : 1) la déclinaison du principe de la nationalité élaboré par Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, et sa répercussion sur le droit international privé et public ; 2) le retour aux origines historiques du droit international italien et le rôle joué par le droit constitutionnel comparé ; 3) la mise en œuvre et la traduction de genres juridiques particuliers, comme la codification internationale ; 4) l’éducation coloniale, y compris l’éducation juridique, par la création de la Scuola diplomatico-coloniale (école coloniale et diplomatique). Mots-clés : Droit international, droit constitutionnel, droit colonial, Italie, XIXᵉ siècle Clio@Thémis – n°18, 2020 2 Elisabetta FIOCCHI MALASPINA I. International and national during the 19th century : an entangled narration Heidelberg 16. August 1873 Ich rechne darauf, Sie in Gent am 8. Sept. zu treffen. Es ist ein grosses, heiliges Werk, das wir beginnen, des ‚Schweisses der Edlen Welt‘. Weil es gelingt, so werden die Völker es segnen auch die, welche zur Zeit noch mißtrauisch und befangen sind 1. 1. Thus, Johann Caspar Bluntschli, jurist from Zurich, at that time professor in Heidelberg, ended his letter to the Italian jurist and politician Pasquale Stanislao Mancini. The meeting he pre-announced in the letter proved to be decisive for the creation of the Institut de droit international. The expression « Schweisses der Edlen Welt » metaphorically represented the need for collective scientific action of the « legal conscience of the civilised world » in the international community2. The objectives of the Institut, of which Pasquale Stanislao Mancini was the first president, included the development of general principles of law and careful, scrupulous work of international codification. The Institut worked independently without political constraints or connections, as Francis Lieber had already hoped in a letter to Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns, referring to : « une espèce de concile juridico-œcuménique sans pape et sans infaibillité »3. The effort of uniting in the legal construction of the discipline, as well as in creating common international rules between States, generated a conception that was different from the past, taking into account the bipartite role of jurists within the international community and within their own State. 2. A jurist had to be capable of mediating between divergent and paradoxically opposing requirements that fluctuated « between universalism and nationalism, humanitarian aspirations and colonial impulses, technical, economic and financial challenges, nations and states […] International law became the product of a historical reflection by an elite of intellectuals that, through an organic relationship with the conscience of civilized nations, translated value into a scientific system »4. The nineteenth century was the century of international law par excellence. In fact, in the nineteenth century international law formed its precise characteristics and a sophisticated legal discipline began to appear, differing from diplomacy and natural law. The protagonists of this development were the international lawyers. They experienced a radical change in the international panorama that had emerged in the late eighteenth century due to the American and French Revolutions, the collapse of the Napoleonic Empire, the events that led to the Congress of Vienna, and the establishment of a new legal international order 5. This order had to be rewritten in the mid-nineteenth century as a result of the Crimean war, at the end of which the Ottoman Empire benefited from European public law with the Paris Treaty in 18566. 1 « Heidelberg 16th August 1873 I am counting on it to meet you in Gent on the 8th of September. It is a great holy work that we are beginning, ‘the toil of the noble world’. Because it will succeed, the nations will bless it, even those who are still suspicious and biased » (author’s translation) : « Letter from J.C. Bluntschli to P.S. Mancini, 16th August 1873 », Museo Centrale del Risorgimento, Roma, MCRR, Fondo Mancini, Busta 858-16 (3). 2 L. Nuzzo, Origini di una scienza : Diritto internazionale e colonialismo nel 19. secolo, Frankfurt am Main, V. Klostermann, 2012, 133. See also L. Nuzzo, « Disordine politico e ordine giuridico. Iniziative e utopie nel diritto internazionale di fine Ottocento », Materiali per una storia della cultura giuridica, 41, 2, 2011, p. 319-338. See also V. Genin, « L’institutionnalisation du droit international comme phénomène transnational (1869–1873). Les réseaux européens de Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns », Journal of the History of International Law/ Revue d’histoire du droit international, 18, 2-3, 2016, p. 181-196, https://doi.org/10.1163/15718050-12340056. 3 A. Rolin, Les origines de l’Institut de droit international, 1873-1923 : Souvenirs d’un témoin, Bruxelles, Vromant 1923, p. 10. 4 L. Nuzzo, M. Vec, « The Birth of International Law as a Legal Discipline », Constructing international law : The birth of a discipline, eds. L. Nuzzo and M. Vec, Frankfurt am Main, 2012, p. IX-XVI, here XII. 5 See R. Cahen, Friedrich Gentz (1764-1832) : Penseur Post-Lumières et acteur du nouvel ordre européen, Berlin, Boston, De Gruyter, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110455342 ; B. Graaf, I de Han and B. Vick eds., Securing Europe after Napoleon : 1815 and the New European Security Culture, Cambridge, 2019, https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108597050. 6 C. Storti, « Empirismo e scienza : il crocevia del diritto internazionale nella prima metà dell'Ottocento », Constructing international law, op. cit., p. 51-145, here 51. Clio@Thémis – n°18, 2020 3 Elisabetta FIOCCHI MALASPINA 3. Indeed, it was during the nineteenth century that the use of international treaties was transformed. Increasingly, they became valuable as genuine instruments for « codification » in order to create common provisions and principles for all States7. The focus was primarily on peace treaties and the emergence of « new enforcement means »8, as well as on the regulation of the laws of war and on international humanitarian law9. The foundation of the International Red Cross in Geneva in 1864 was achieved thanks to a platform that involved States, public opinion, politicians, and legal experts 10. But in reality these humanitarian developments always had to deal with the paradoxes of the dynamics of international law, subject to the thought patterns of power and politics, inevitably, only scarcely reconcilable with the spirit of peace. The nineteenth century also saw the formation of « the international law of international global society », particularly with the emergence of China and Japan, and consequently the global circulation of theories on international law that were developed in Europe and North America 11. Clear examples of this are the first Chinese and Japanese translations of Henry Wheaton’s Elements of International Law, published in 1836, and contemporaneously with them, the dissemination of translations or reprints of seventeenth – and eighteenth century treatises such as Hugo Grotius’ De iure belli ac pacis and Emer de Vattel’s Droit des gens12. These phenomena had an impact both on the history of publishing and on the history of law, particularly on the mediation and abstraction of legal concepts that enabled their universalization13. 4. Furthermore, during the nineteenth
Recommended publications
  • Chapter One: Introduction
    CHANGING PERCEPTIONS OF IL DUCE TRACING POLITICAL TRENDS IN THE ITALIAN-AMERICAN MEDIA DURING THE EARLY YEARS OF FASCISM by Ryan J. Antonucci Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the History Program YOUNGSTOWN STATE UNIVERSITY August, 2013 Changing Perceptions of il Duce Tracing Political Trends in the Italian-American Media during the Early Years of Fascism Ryan J. Antonucci I hereby release this thesis to the public. I understand that this thesis will be made available from the OhioLINK ETD Center and the Maag Library Circulation Desk for public access. I also authorize the University or other individuals to make copies of this thesis as needed for scholarly research. Signature: Ryan J. Antonucci, Student Date Approvals: Dr. David Simonelli, Thesis Advisor Date Dr. Brian Bonhomme, Committee Member Date Dr. Martha Pallante, Committee Member Date Dr. Carla Simonini, Committee Member Date Dr. Salvatore A. Sanders, Associate Dean of Graduate Studies Date Ryan J. Antonucci © 2013 iii ABSTRACT Scholars of Italian-American history have traditionally asserted that the ethnic community’s media during the 1920s and 1930s was pro-Fascist leaning. This thesis challenges that narrative by proving that moderate, and often ambivalent, opinions existed at one time, and the shift to a philo-Fascist position was an active process. Using a survey of six Italian-language sources from diverse cities during the inauguration of Benito Mussolini’s regime, research shows that interpretations varied significantly. One of the newspapers, Il Cittadino Italo-Americano (Youngstown, Ohio) is then used as a case study to better understand why events in Italy were interpreted in certain ways.
    [Show full text]
  • Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the International Legal Discourse of 19Th Century Italy
    1 Elisabetta FIOCCHI MALASPINA « Toil of the noble world » : Pasquale Stanislao Mancini, Augusto Pierantoni and the international legal discourse of 19th century Italy Abstract : The aim of this article is to reconstruct, from a legal historical point of view, the complexity and the meaning of international law in the Italian peninsula during the 19th century. The paper will analyse different entanglements that constituted the core of nineteenth-century Italian international legal discourse. It is structured in four sections, dealing respectively with : 1) the principle of nationality elaborated by Pasquale Stanislao Mancini and its repercussion both on private and public international law ; 2) the return to the historical origins of Italian international law and the role played by comparative constitutional law ; 3) the implementation and translation of particular legal genres, such as the attempts to codify international law ; 4) colonial education, including legal education, through the creation of the Scuola diplomatico- coloniale (colonial and diplomatic school). Keywords : International law, constitutional law, colonial law, Italy, 19th century Résumé : L’objectif de cet article est de reconstruire, d’un point de vue historico- juridique, la complexité et la signification du droit international dans la péninsule italienne au cours du XIXe siècle. L’article analysera les différents enchevêtrements qui constituaient le cœur du discours juridique international italien du XIXe siècle et il est structuré en quatre sections, traitant respectivement
    [Show full text]
  • Elenco Dei Governi Italiani
    Elenco dei Governi Italiani Questo è un elenco dei Governi Italiani e dei relativi Presidenti del Consiglio dei Ministri. Le Istituzioni in Italia Le istituzioni della Repubblica Italiana Costituzione Parlamento o Camera dei deputati o Senato della Repubblica o Legislature Presidente della Repubblica Governo (categoria) o Consiglio dei Ministri o Presidente del Consiglio dei Ministri o Governi Magistratura Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura (CSM) Consiglio di Stato Corte dei Conti Governo locale (Suddivisioni) o Regioni o Province o Comuni Corte costituzionale Unione Europea Relazioni internazionali Partiti e politici Leggi e Regolamenti parlamentari Elezioni e Calendario Referendum modifica Categorie: Politica, Diritto e Stato Portale Italia Portale Politica Indice [nascondi] 1 Regno d'Italia 2 Repubblica Italiana 3 Sigle e abbreviazioni 4 Politici con maggior numero di Governi della Repubblica Italiana 5 Voci correlate Regno d'Italia Periodo Nome del Governo Primo Ministro 23 marzo 1861 - 12 giugno 1861 Governo Cavour Camillo Benso Conte di Cavour[1] 12 giugno 1861 - 3 marzo 1862 Governo Ricasoli I Bettino Ricasoli 3 marzo 1862 - 8 dicembre 1862 Governo Rattazzi I Urbano Rattazzi 8 dicembre 1862 - 24 marzo 1863 Governo Farini Luigi Carlo Farini 24 marzo 1863 - 28 settembre 1864 Governo Minghetti I Marco Minghetti 28 settembre 1864 - 31 dicembre Governo La Marmora Alfonso La Marmora 1865 I Governo La Marmora 31 dicembre 1865 - 20 giugno 1866 Alfonso La Marmora II 20 giugno 1866 - 10 aprile 1867 Governo Ricasoli
    [Show full text]
  • The Kingdom of Italy: Unity Or Disparity, 1860-1945
    The Kingdom of Italy: Unity or Disparity, 1860-1945 Part IIIb: The First Years of the Kingdom Governments of the Historic Left 1876-1900 Decline of the Right/Rise of the Left • Biggest issue dividing them had been Rome—now resolved • Emerging issues • Taxation, especially the macinato • Neglect of social issues • Free trade policies that hurt the South disproportionately • Limited suffrage • Piedmontization • Treatment of Garibaldi volunteers • Use of police against demonstrations The North-South divide • emerging issues more important to South • Many of Left leaders from South Elections of 1874 • Slim majority for Right Fall of Minghetti, March 1876 Appointment of a Left Prime Minister and the elections of November 1876 Agostino Depretis Benedetto Cairoli Francesco Crispi Antonio Starabba, Marchese di Rudinì Giovanni Giolitti Genl. Luigi Pelloux Prime Minister Dates in office Party/Parliament Key actions or events Agostino Depretis 25 March 1876 Left Coppino Law Lombardy 25 December 1877 Sonnino and Iacini inquiry into the problems of the South Railway construction continues with state aid 26 December 1877 Left Anarchist insurrection in Matese 24 March 1878 Benedetto Cairoli 24 March 1878 Left Attempted anarchist assassination of king Lombary 19 December 1878 Depretis 19 December 1878 Left 14 July 1879 Cairoli 14 July 1879 Left Costa founds Revolutionary Socialist Party of Romagna 25 November 1879 25 November 1879 Left 29 May 1881 Depretis 29 May 1881 Left Widened suffrage; first socialist elected 25 May 1883 Italy joins Austria-Hungary and Germany to create Triplice Use of trasformismo 25 May 1883 Left 30 March 1884 Final abolition of grist tax macinato 30 March 1884 Left First colonial venture into Assab and Massawa on Red Sea coast 29 June 1885 29 June 1885 Left Battle of Dogali debacle 4 April 1887 4 April 1887 Left 29 July 1887 Died in office Francesco Crispi 29 July 1887 Left 10-year tariff war with France begun Sicily 6 February 1891 Zanardelli penal code enacted; local govt.
    [Show full text]
  • JENS PETERSEN the Italian Aristocracy, the Savoy Monarchy, and Fascism
    JENS PETERSEN The Italian Aristocracy, the Savoy Monarchy, and Fascism in KARINA URBACH (ed.), European Aristocracies and the Radical Right 1918-1939 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007) pp. 91–110 ISBN: 978 0 199 23173 7 The following PDF is published under a Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND licence. Anyone may freely read, download, distribute, and make the work available to the public in printed or electronic form provided that appropriate credit is given. However, no commercial use is allowed and the work may not be altered or transformed, or serve as the basis for a derivative work. The publication rights for this volume have formally reverted from Oxford University Press to the German Historical Institute London. All reasonable effort has been made to contact any further copyright holders in this volume. Any objections to this material being published online under open access should be addressed to the German Historical Institute London. DOI: 6 The Italian Aristocracy, the Savoy Monarchy, and Fascism JENS PETERSEN What political role did the aristocracy play in the early decades of a unified Italy? Researchers are widely divided in their opin- ions on this question. They range from the rose-tinted view of Arno Mayer, who regarded the ancien regi,me nobility as still at the core of Italy's social and political system, to opinions that speak of a rapid and unstoppable decline. 1 Although aristocratic values continued to shape the path of upward mobility for the middle classes, nobility as such did not play an important role in the Italian nineteenth-century social structure, because it did not constitute a well-defined group in itself, due to its regional more than national status.
    [Show full text]
  • Questionariostoria
    QuestionarioStoria 1 In seguito a quale evento bellico l'esercito del Regno 7 A seguito di quale accusa fu sciolto il Partito d'Italia poté entrare in Roma nel 1870? Socialista Italiano nel 1894? A) Alla sconfitta dei Francesi a Sedan A) L'accusa di aver appoggiato i Fasci siciliani B) Alla sconfitta dei Prussiani a Verdun B) L'accusa di spionaggio a favore della Seconda Internazionale socialista C) Alla sconfitta degli Austriaci a Sadowa C) L'accusa di voler attentare alla vita del sovrano D) Alla sconfitta dei Francesi a Lipsia D) L' accusa di aver attentato alla vita di Umberto I 2 Come reagì il governo Rudinì alle agitazioni popolari del 1898? 8 Tra quali nazioni l'irredentismo italiano fu causa di rapporti diplomatici tesi? A) Cercò alleanze in parlamento A) L'Italia e la Polonia B) Fece importanti concessioni ai dimostranti B) L'Italia e la Grecia C) Rassegnò le dimissioni C) L'Italia e l'Impero ottomano D) Si affidò all'esercito D) L'Italia e l'Austria - Ungheria 3 Nel 1884 il governo Depretis abolì un'imposta invisa alla popolazione. Quale? 9 In quale anno morì Camillo Cavour? A) La tassa sul macinato A) Nel 1865 B) La tassa doganale regionale B) Nel 1875 C) La tassa comunale di utilizzo delle acque pubbliche C) Nel 1861 D) La tassa sulla prima casa D) Nel 1871 4 Quali direttive di politica estera adottò Antonio 10 Nel 1861 espugnò, dopo un assedio, la fortezza di Rudinì nel marzo del 1896, quando fu incaricato di Gaeta, ultima roccaforte dei Borbone; condusse nella sostituire Francesco Crispi alla guida dell'Esecutivo? Terza guerra d'indipendenza le truppe dell'esercito che operavano sul basso Po.
    [Show full text]
  • Lettere Scritte Da Thomas Archer Hirst a Luigi Cremona Dal 1865 Al 1892 Conservate Presso L’Istituto Mazziniano Di Genova
    LETTERE SCRITTE DA THOMAS ARCHER HIRST A LUIGI CREMONA DAL 1865 AL 1892 CONSERVATE PRESSO L’ISTITUTO MAZZINIANO DI GENOVA a cura di Giovanna Dimitolo www.luigi-cremona.it – luglio 2016 Indice Presentazione della corrispondenza 3 Criteri di edizione 3 Necrologio di Thomas Archer Hirst 4 Traduzione del necrologio di Thomas Archer Hirst 9 Il carteggio 14 Tabella – i dati delle lettere 83 Indice dei nomi citati nelle lettere 86 Bibliografia 92 2 Immagine di copertina: Thomas Archer Hirst (http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/PictDisplay/Hirst.html) www.luigi-cremona.it – luglio 2016 Presentazione della corrispondenza La corrispondenza qui trascritta è composta da 84 lettere di Thomas Archer Hirst a Luigi Cremona e da 2 di Cremona a Hirst (una delle quali è probabilmente una bozza). La corrispondenza tra Hirst e Cremona racconta l’evoluzione di un profondo rapporto di amicizia tra i due matematici, della viva passione intellettuale che li accomuna e dell’ammirazione di Hirst per il collega italiano. Se nelle prime lettere vi sono molti richiami alle questioni matematiche, alle ricerche, alle pubblicazioni sulle riviste di matematiche, insieme a un costante rammarico per il poco tempo che Hirst può dedicare allo studio e un amichevole rimbrotto per gli incarichi politici di Cremona che lo distolgono dalla ricerca, man mano che passano gli anni, la corrispondenza diventa sempre più intima, vi compaiono le preoccupazioni per la salute declinante di Hirst, il dolore per la scomparsa prematura di persone care (il fratello e la prima moglie di Cremona, la nipote di Hirst), le vite degli amici comuni, i racconti dei viaggi e il desiderio sempre vivo di incontrarsi durante le vacanze estive o in occasione di conferenze internazionali.
    [Show full text]
  • Italian Unification (1861-1870) Modern Italy Became a Nation-State During
    Italian unification (1861-1870) Modern Italy became a nation-state during the Risorgimento on March 17, 1861 when most of the states of the Italian Peninsula and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies were united under king Victor Emmanuel II of the House of Savoy, hitherto king of Sardinia, a realm that included Piedmont. Giuseppe Garibaldi (July 4, 1807 – June 2, 1882) was an Italian patriot and soldier of the Risorgimento. He personally led many of the military campaigns that brought about the formation of a unified Italy. He has been dubbed the "Hero of the Two Worlds" in tribute to his military expeditions in South America and Europe. The architect of Italian unification was Count Camillo Benso di Cavour, the Chief Minister of Victor Emmanuel. Rome itself remained for a decade under the Papacy, and became part of the Kingdom of Italy only in 1870, the final date of Italian unification. Napoleon III's defeat brought an end to the French military protection for Pope Pius IX and on September 20, Italian troops breached Rome's walls at Porta Pia and entered the city. The Italian occupation forced Pius IX to his palace where he declared himself a prisoner in the Vatican until the Lateran Pacts of 1929. The Holy See (State of the Vatican City) is now an independent enclave surrounded by Rome, Italy. From the unification to the First World War (1870-1914) From its beginning the Italian Nationalist Movement had dreamt about Italy joining the modernized World Powers. In the North, extensive industrialization and the building of a modern infrastructure was well underway by the 1890s.
    [Show full text]
  • Working Paper Dipartimento Di Economia Pubblica
    WORKING PAPER DIPARTIMENTO DI ECONOMIA PUBBLICA Working Paper n. 141 Silvia Fedeli e Francesco Forte A survival analysis of the circulation of the political elites governing Italy from 1861 to 1994 Roma, Aprile 2011 1 Silvia Fedeli and Francesco Forte A survival analysis of the circulation of the political elites governing Italy from 1861 to 1994 Abstract We study the determinants of governments and legislatures’ survival in Italy from the unification to the end of the I Republic (1861-1994) - excluding the fascist period and the subsequent transitory institutional period, "Constituente" (1946-1948). We test whether institutional features such as electoral systems, form of State and extent of suffrage had any effect on the survival of legislatures and governments. We control for voting power of the parliamentary groups, number of parties represented in the parliament and size of the representative bodies. Unlike the political economy wisdom, we show that, over the whole period, governments and legislatures’ survivals are inversely related to the plurality electoral system. The restricted suffrage and a high voting power of the leading parties reduce the risk of anticipated end of governments. The survival of the legislatures is related to the form of state (republic) and to the voting power of the leading party. Universita’ di Roma “La Sapienza” Facolta’ di Economia Dipartimento di Economia e diritto Via del Castro Laurenziano, 9 00161 Roma – Italy E-mail: [email protected] [email protected] Tel. and Fax +39 06 4976 6399 Keywords: Elites; Survival analysis; Electoral systems; Voting power, Political institutions. 2 1. Introduction In this paper we analyze the “struggle for survival” of governments and legislatures of the Italian democratic parliaments, from the creation of the Italian state (1861) up to 1994, with the exclusion of the fascist period (i.e., the legislatures from 1924 to 1945 in which the democratic institutions were absent and of the subsequent transitory institutional period, known as "Constituente", lasting until 1948).
    [Show full text]
  • Esercitati GRATIS On-Line! N
    N. Domanda Risposta 1 Chi era il Presidente del Consiglio durante il primo sciopero generale nazionale Giovanni Giolitti italiano? 2 Per mezzo di quale accordo il governo italiano rese le sue leggi sul matrimonio ed il Con i Patti Lateranensi divorzio conformi a quelle della Chiesa Cattolica? 3 Chi fu nel '400 il più insigne rappresentante e fautore della politica di equilibrio? Lorenzo il Magnifico 4 Quali paesi facevano parte della Triplice Alleanza? L'Austria - Ungheria, la Germania e l'Italia 5 Nel 1884 il governo Depretis abolì un'imposta invisa alla popolazione. Quale? La tassa sul macinato 6 In quale anno iniziò per l'Italia la prima guerra mondiale? Nel 1915 7 Quale dei seguenti avvenimenti si colloca cronologicamente tra la Guerra dei Sei Il ritiro delle truppe americane dal Vietnam Giorni e il crollo del Muro di Berlino? 8 In favore di chi il Parlamento italiano approvò la Legge delle Guarentigie? Del pontefice 9 Città considerata tra le più importanti colonie greche sorte sul territorio italiano. Si tratta Cuma di: 10 Dove si ritirò Garibaldi dopo il fatidico incontro con Vittorio Emanuele II? Isola di Caprera 11 Nel febbraio del 1922, dopo il governo Bonomi, fu affidato l'incarico di presiedere il Luigi Facta Consiglio dei Ministri a un uomo politico ritenuto da molti responsabile di aver aperto le porte al fascismo. Questi era: 12 Chi tornò sul trono del Granducato di Toscana in seguito al Congresso di Vienna? Ferdinando III d'Asburgo - Lorena 13 Chi furono i protagonisti dello storico incontro di Teano, avvenuto il 26 ottobre
    [Show full text]
  • The Italian Emigration of Modern Times
    The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Dissertations Spring 5-2010 The Italian Emigration of Modern Times: Relations Between Italy and the United States Concerning Emigration Policy, Diplomacy, and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment, 1870-1927 Patrizia Fama Stahle University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations Part of the Cultural History Commons, European History Commons, Political History Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Stahle, Patrizia Fama, "The Italian Emigration of Modern Times: Relations Between Italy and the United States Concerning Emigration Policy, Diplomacy, and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment, 1870-1927" (2010). Dissertations. 934. https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations/934 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Southern Mississippi THE ITALIAN EMIGRATION OF MODERN TIMES: RELATIONS BETWEENITALY AND THE UNITED STATES CONCERNING EMIGRATION POLICY,DIPLOMACY, AND ANTI-IMMIGRANT SENTIMENT, 1870-1927 by Patrizia Famá Stahle Abstract of a Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements of the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2010 ABSTRACT THE ITALIAN EMIGRATION OF MODERN TIMES: RELATIONS BETWEEN ITALY AND THE UNITED STATES CONCERNING EMIGRATION POLICY, DIPLOMACY, AND ANTI-IMMIGRANT SENTIMENT, 1870-1927 by Patrizia Famà Stahle May 2010 In the late 1800s, the United States was the great destination of Italian emigrants. In North America, employers considered Italians industrious individuals, but held them in low esteem.
    [Show full text]
  • Friendship, Crisis and Estrangement: U.S.-Italian Relations, 1871-1920
    FRIENDSHIP, CRISIS AND ESTRANGEMENT: U.S.-ITALIAN RELATIONS, 1871-1920 A Ph.D. Dissertation by Bahar Gürsel Department of History Bilkent University Ankara March 2007 To Mine & Sinan FRIENDSHIP, CRISIS AND ESTRANGEMENT: U.S.-ITALIAN RELATIONS, 1871-1920 The Institute of Economics and Social Sciences of Bilkent University by BAHAR GÜRSEL In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BILKENT UNIVERSITY ANKARA March 2007 I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History. --------------------------------- Asst. Prof. Dr. Timothy M. Roberts Supervisor I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History. --------------------------------- Asst. Prof. Dr. Nur Bilge Criss Examining Committee Member I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History. --------------------------------- Asst. Prof. Dr. Edward P. Kohn Examining Committee Member I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History. --------------------------------- Asst. Prof. Dr. Oktay Özel Examining Committee Member I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History.
    [Show full text]